Paper |
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MOPP137 |
Design Progress of the MYRRHA Low Energy Beam Line |
381 |
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- R. Salemme, L. Medeiros Romão, D. Vandeplassche
Studiecentrum voor Kernenergie - Centre d'Étude de l'énergie Nucléaire (SCK•CEN), Mol, Belgium
- M.A. Baylac, D. Bondoux, F. Bouly, J.-M. De Conto, E. Froidefond
LPSC, Grenoble Cedex, France
- J.-L. Biarrotte
IPN, Orsay, France
- D. Uriot
CEA/DSM/IRFU, France
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The MYRRHA project, a flexible spectrum neutron irradiation facility, is designed according to the Accelerator Driven System (ADS) reactor concept. The MYRRHA driver consists of a high power superconducting proton LINAC. A prototype of the front end injector is being built up into a test platform conceived to experimentally address its design issues. Currently, the ECR proton source has been industrially procured. LPSC Grenoble designed the subsequent Low Energy Beam Transport (LEBT) section. Right before the RFQ, a short section hosts an electrostatic beam chopper producing carefully controlled beam interruptions. In this paper the status of the LEBT design with the associated beam instrumentation is reviewed. Future experimental plans including LEBT beam characterization and optimization of the beam transmission are presented.
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TUPP100 |
Operation Of The Versatile Accelerator Driving the Low Power ADS GUINEVERE at SCK•CEN |
659 |
TUPOL07 |
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- M.A. Baylac, A. Billebaud, P. Boge, D. Bondoux, J. Bouvier, S. Chabod, G. Dargaud, E. Froidefond, E. Labussière, R. Micoud, S. Rey
LPSC, Grenoble Cedex, France
- A. Kochetkov, J. Mertens, F. Van Gestel, C. Van Grieken, B. Van Houdt, G. Vittiglio
SCK•CEN, Mol, Belgium
- F.R. Lecolley, J.L. Lecouey, G. Lehaut, N. Marie-Nourry
CNRS/IN2P3/LPC CAEN, Caen, France
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GUINEVERE provides a low power accelerator driven system (ADS) to investigate on-line reactivity monitoring and operational procedures of an ADS. It consists of a versatile neutron source, GENEPI-3C, driving the fast sub-critical core, VENUS-F, in SCK•CEN (Belgium). GENEPI-3C is an electrostatic accelerator generating 14 MeV neutrons by bombarding a 250 keV deuteron beam onto a tritium target located within the reactor core. This accelerator produces alternatively continuous beam (up to 1 mA DC), possibly chopped with fast and adjustable interruptions, or short and intense deuteron bunches (~25 mA peak, 1 μs). This paper presents the facility and assesses the 2 years of coupled operation of the accelerator to the reactor.
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Slides TUPP100 [0.969 MB]
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